There are moments when football reminds the world that humanity is capable of far more than politics often allows. The 2026 FIFA World Cup was one of those moments.
For several weeks, the United States opened its stadiums to supporters from every corner of the globe. Among them were thousands of Iranians who travelled despite years of diplomatic hostility between Tehran and Washington. They cheered, celebrated, took photographs with American fans, exchanged jerseys, shared meals and proved that ordinary people rarely carry the hatred that governments sometimes project onto one another. It was perhaps the closest the two nations had come to genuine people-to-people reconciliation in years.
Then, alas.
The optimism that football briefly inspired was quickly overshadowed by renewed military tensions and hostile rhetoric. The smiles in the stands gave way to headlines about missiles, retaliation and the ever-present threat of a wider conflict. Once again, diplomacy retreated while confrontation occupied centre stage.
It raises an uncomfortable question.
If football can bring together supporters from countries that have spent decades treating each other as enemies, why can’t world leaders do the same?
Football has always been more than ninety minutes of competition. It is one of the few global languages that requires no translation. A goal scored by Iran is understood by a fan in Brazil. A celebration by an American player can be applauded by a supporter from Ghana. Inside a stadium, nationality does not disappear, but it coexists with something greater—a shared love for the beautiful game.
Politics, unfortunately, often struggles to create that same atmosphere.
The irony is difficult to ignore. While diplomats spend years negotiating behind closed doors, football routinely achieves what countless political summits cannot. It puts rivals in the same room. It encourages conversation. It creates shared experiences. It reminds people that before they are citizens of competing states, they are human beings.
During the World Cup, many Americans welcomed Iranian visitors with warmth rather than suspicion. Iranian supporters explored American cities, interacted with local communities, and experienced a country that often appears in their media through the lens of political conflict. Likewise, Americans encountered Iranian fans whose greatest concern was whether their national team would make it to the next round, not whether they were enemies.
Those encounters may seem insignificant to politicians, but history suggests otherwise.
Peace rarely begins with treaties. It begins with people discovering that the stranger they feared is not so different after all.
Football has repeatedly demonstrated its diplomatic power. It has paused civil wars, inspired peace initiatives and opened doors where formal diplomacy had failed. While no football match can solve decades of geopolitical disputes, it can soften perceptions, reduce prejudice and create the human connections that political agreements desperately need.
That is precisely why global leaders should stop viewing major sporting tournaments as mere entertainment.
Imagine if every World Cup hosted structured peace dialogues alongside the matches. Imagine if rival governments met not only in conference halls but also in stadiums filled with supporters celebrating together. Imagine if FIFA, the United Nations and participating governments used football festivals to facilitate cultural exchanges, youth forums and diplomatic conversations between nations locked in conflict.
The world’s biggest sporting event already gathers presidents, ministers, ambassadors and millions of citizens in one place.
Why waste such an opportunity?
The 2026 World Cup showed that coexistence is not a fantasy. For a brief period, Americans and Iranians occupied the same spaces, obeyed the same rules, applauded moments of brilliance, and respected one another as football lovers. That should have been the beginning of something bigger. Instead, the world returned to familiar divisions.
Perhaps that is football’s greatest tragedy. It continually proves that ordinary people are capable of unity, only for political leaders to remind us how difficult peace can become when power, ideology and national interests take precedence over our shared humanity.
The beautiful game cannot stop wars on its own. But it can open doors that politics keeps firmly shut.
If world leaders truly desire peace, they should stop treating football merely as a spectacle watched from the VIP box. They should recognise it for what it has always been: a powerful diplomatic stage capable of bringing together people whom politics has spent decades keeping apart.
The 2026 World Cup offered such a stage. The world simply failed to play its part.


“Football doesn’t solve conflicts, but it reminds us why they’re worth solving.”
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